And they say the Pentagon is slow when it comes to procurement? It moved pretty quickly this week – although it was cancelling a procurement instead of actually buying something.

There’s both good and bad news associated with this tale.

The good news is that someone, somewhere, concluded there was something wrong with what the Pentagon was seeking, so they put a halt to the procurement (the bigger the program, of course, the less likely this is to happen).

The bad news is that someone, somewhere, drafted a 48-page document detailing what the military wanted to buy. Putting such a document together costs a lot of money, and it’s part of the reason Pentagon overhead is so tough to cut: there are corps of bureaucrats, and a lot of contracted civilian workers, churning this stuff out 24/7.

Anyway, on Wednesday at 2:02 p.m., the folks at the Joint Improvised Explosive Defeat Device Organization (JIEDDO) said their outfit “is seeking an urgent need to field a Multi-Cam Redirect backpack that meets all of the prioritized requirements outlined in this solicitation.”

Sounds pretty dire (even if you’re not quite sure what it means), right? After all, JIEDDO is the Pentagon office responsible for defending U.S. troops from improvised explosive devices — IEDs — the most deadly weapon used against them in the post-9/11 wars.

THOR III is the Electronic Counter Measure (ECM) system that provides US soldiers with protection from the Radio triggered variant of these devices and the correct carriage of this equipment is critical to maintaining a soldier’s squad’s safety on operations. The present THOR III backpack, as well as being ergonomically sub optimal, has no ability to store the personal equipment required by the soldier to operate over a 24 hour period. This has led to several instances of ‘work arounds’ that have caused the ECM to be ineffective in the event of an IED.

The inability to safely carry the ECM system simultaneously with personal equipment has led to the need to share the soldier’s personal equipment around the remainder of the soldiers within the squad. To highlight the problems this causes, soldiers are presently carrying in the region of 50kg (110lbs) of their own equipment in temperatures around 58 C (138 F). Adding to this burden clearly reduces their ability to fight.

Therefore, Joint Improvised Explosive Defeat Device (JIEDDO) is seeking an urgent need to field a Multi-Cam Redirect backpack that meets all of the prioritized requirements below to the ECM operator in time for the height of the summer fighting season in order to reduce fatigue for both the operator and the squad.

Ergonomically sub optimal? Yikes…sounds dangerous. Tell us what you need so we can get to work on it pronto!

— Maintainability of equipment to passively transfer heat during operation.